The CFP punts on expansion

5Mind. The Meme Platform

As the Indiana Hoosiers are still trying to figure out where to display their most unlikely but well-deserved national championship trophy, the eleven honchoes who comprise the College Football Playoff committee announced what the majority of college football insiders knew: a 12‑team bracket, unchanged, unexpanded will greet the 2026 season.  

Friday marked the official deadline for the CFP management committee, the 10 FBS commissioners plus Notre Dame Athletic Director Pete Bevacqua, to inform ESPN of any format shake‑ups for next season.

Despite the rumors and incessant talk, no such shake‑up materialized.

CFP executive director Rich Clark, a retired Air Force Lt. General, delivered the expected confirmation in a statement so neutral it could referee its own press conference, explained that months of “ongoing discussion” had produced precisely zero consensus. The decision to stand pat, he said, will give the committee “additional time” to evaluate the 12‑team model.

In other words, let’s all watch another season play out and pretend we might do something bold later. Clark emphasized that everyone agrees the current format has brought more excitement and broader access.  However, there is not enough agreement to actually change anything – at the present.

That harmony evaporated the moment the conversation turned to the future. The commissioners met Sunday in Miami, where the two power brokers who must jointly approve any format change, Big Ten commissioner Tony Petitti and SEC commissioner Greg Sankey, once again found themselves on opposite sides of the expansion canyon.

Neither blinked.

The SEC continues to champion a 16‑team playoff with five automatic qualifiers and 11 at‑large bids, a setup that would give the selection committee even more influence. The Big Ten, never one to be out‑ambitioned, has floated a field as large as 24 teams with multiple automatic bids for the sport’s top leagues.

With visions that far apart, the 2026 bracket never stood a chance of growing.

Still, the expansion debate is not going anywhere.

Under the CFP’s media contract, commissioners face a Dec. 1 deadline each year to notify ESPN of any changes for the following season. That leaves roughly 10 months for more posturing, more proposals, and more meetings that end exactly where they began.

This year’s deadline was already pushed back nearly two months in a desperate attempt to find common ground in an effort that predictably fizzled out.

Even without expansion, the CFP is undergoing significant changes. Automatic bids will now go to the champions of the ACC, Big Ten, Big 12, and SEC, regardless of ranking, plus the highest‑ranked Group of 6 champion. Notre Dame, if ranked inside the top 12, will also receive an automatic bid, potentially bumping a higher‑ranked at‑large team. It’s a reshuffling that reflects the sport’s new power map more than any philosophical shift.

The money is being rearranged, too.

The CFP is ditching its performance‑based bonus model that handed Miami and Notre Dame $20 million apiece in recent seasons in favor of fixed revenue shares. The Big Ten and SEC will each receive about 29% of total CFP revenue, the ACC 17%, the Big 12 15%, and the Group of 6 conferences a collective 10%.

So no, the playoff won’t expand in 2026. But the politics, the money, and the maneuvering behind the scenes are only getting louder.

Expansion is far from dead.

It is just taking the scenic route while enjoying the off season.

Contact Your Elected Officials
Greg Maresca
Greg Maresca
Greg Maresca is a New York City native and U.S. Marine Corps veteran who writes for TTC. He resides in the Pennsylvania Coal Region. His work can also be found in The American Spectator, NewsBreak, Daily Item, Republican Herald, Standard Speaker, The Remnant Newspaper, Gettysburg Times, Daily Review, The News-Item, Standard Journal and more.

Taking the Hype Out of Hypotheticals

There is a growing tendency in our national debate to substitute emotion for precision. Immigration enforcement is no longer discussed primarily as policy.

Are Epstein’s Worst Sins Being Confirmed?

WARNING: THIS ARTICLE HAS DISTURBING CONTENT OF A SENSITIVE...

Sadly, Minnesota has become a battleground, once again

Minnesota is again a battleground. Five years after George Floyd protests, demonstrators now target ICE agents enforcing the law.

Stolen Land or Stolen Context?: What We Are No Longer Teaching Our Children

To assess whether “stolen land” is accurate, we must examine how U.S. land was acquired — historically, not emotionally or rhetorically.

Repeal the National Childhood Vaccine Injury Act: The Original Petition

In 1986, Congress granted vaccine makers unique legal protections, shielding them from most lawsuits over injuries caused by vaccines.

Trump Admin Plans to Spend $38 Billion to Convert Warehouses Into ICE Detention Centers

The Trump administration plans to spend more than $38 billion to buy and convert warehouses into detention centers for illegal aliens.

Don Lemon Pleads Not Guilty in Minnesota Church Protest Case

Don Lemon pleaded not guilty to violating federal civil rights laws through involvement with a Minnesota church protest.

Arizona Sheriff Denies Claims He’s Blocking FBI From Evidence in Guthrie Case

Arizona sheriff says gloves found in Savannah Guthrie’s mother’s disappearance probe, denies withholding evidence from FBI.

Trump Says US Military ‘Best-Trained, Best-Equipped’ Under His Administration

President Donald Trump highlighted military successes and investments during a speech to soldiers in Fayetteville, North Carolina.

Trump Says 2nd Carrier Group to Middle East Will Be Leaving Soon

Trump told reporters he is sending a second U.S. aircraft carrier strike group to the Middle East, in case ongoing negotiations with Iran fall through.

US, Taiwan Reach Trade Deal to Cut Tariffs, Boost Purchases of US Goods

U.S. and Taiwan sign trade deal with 15% tariff on Taiwanese imports, expanding U.S. access for beef, pork, dairy, wheat, and autos.

EPA Rescinds Obama-Era Finding That Served as Basis for Climate Regulation

President Trump and EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin moved to rescind the 2009 finding that underpins federal greenhouse gas regulations.
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

MAGA Business Central